Posted on 04/26/2026 1:51:54 AM PDT by Cronos
You know that feeling when you scroll through your phone contacts and realize half the numbers belong to people you haven’t spoken to in years? Last week, I did exactly that while looking for an old colleague’s number. What struck me wasn’t just the silence between us – it was remembering how we used to grab lunch together three times a week, share weekend barbecue invites, and text about everything from work drama to our kids’ soccer games. Then I retired at 62, and within six months, we’d become strangers
That’s when it hit me: we weren’t really friends. We were just two people whose lives happened to intersect at the same place, at the same time, following the same daily script.
Most of us spend decades building what we think are meaningful relationships. We celebrate birthdays with coworkers, attend neighborhood gatherings, join clubs, maintain family traditions. But here’s what nobody tells you until it’s too late: proximity creates the illusion of intimacy.
Think about it. How many of your current relationships exist primarily because you see these people regularly? The gym buddy you chat with between sets. The neighbor you wave to every morning. The cousin you only see at holiday dinners. These connections feel substantial because they’re consistent, but consistency isn’t the same as depth.
According to the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, “Approximately one-quarter of community-dwelling Americans aged 65 and older are considered to be socially isolated, and a significant proportion of adults in the United States report feeling lonely.” But here’s what that statistic doesn’t capture: many of these people had full social calendars before retirement. They had lunch dates, work friends, regular activities. What they didn’t have were relationships that could survive a change in routine.
Why obligation masquerades as affection After my mother’s death, I noticed something peculiar at family gatherings. The relatives who showed up weren’t necessarily the ones who cared most – they were the ones who felt most obligated. The aunt who never missed a birthday but also never called just to chat. The cousins who attended every funeral but couldn’t tell you what was happening in your life between them.
We maintain these relationships out of duty, telling ourselves it’s love. But obligation and love aren’t the same thing, even though we’ve become experts at confusing the two.
Have you ever continued a friendship mainly because ending it would be too awkward? Or kept attending gatherings you don’t enjoy because not showing up would require an explanation? That’s obligation wearing the mask of connection. And as we age, these masks become heavier to wear.
Chinese research captured this perfectly when one participant observed: “Good relationships are those where people remember your needs without you asking.” How many of your relationships pass that test?
The loneliness that comes with clarity What makes aging particularly cruel isn’t losing people – it’s finally seeing your relationships clearly. You realize that the colleague from the insurance company wasn’t your friend; he was just someone who ate lunch at the same time you did. Your golf foursome wasn’t about friendship; it was about filling a Saturday morning time slot.
Eileen K. Graham and fellow researchers explain that “Loneliness is the subjective feeling of a lack of meaningful social connections or a sense of belongingness.” The keyword there is “meaningful.” You can be surrounded by people and still feel profoundly alone if those connections lack substance.
I learned this the hard way after retiring. Within months, the daily coffee runs with colleagues stopped. The after-work drinks became “we should catch up sometime” texts that never materialized. These weren’t bad people or fair-weather friends – they were just proximity partners whose lives no longer intersected with mine.
When routine becomes the relationship Every week, I play poker with four longtime friends. But here’s the thing – the poker isn’t really about poker. It’s about having a reason to show up, a structure that makes connection feel less vulnerable. Without that weekly game, would we call each other? Would we make the effort.
Routine becomes a crutch for relationships that can’t stand on their own. The Sunday dinners, the book clubs, the morning walks – these rituals create a framework that makes us feel connected. But when the routine breaks, the relationship often breaks with it.
Oliver Huxhold and Katherine Fiori, both psychologists, note that “Loneliness is a feeling that our social needs aren’t being met.” The problem is, we often don’t realize our needs aren’t being met until the routine that masked the emptiness disappears.
The courage to build real connections So what do you do when you realize most of your relationships were held together by circumstance rather than choice? First, you grieve. There’s a real loss in discovering that connections you thought were solid were actually situational.
But then, you get intentional.
I’ve discovered that meaningful relationships require effort that goes beyond convenience. They need vulnerability, not just proximity. They require choosing to show up when there’s no obligation, no routine, no external reason to be there.
Funny thing is that the robot in Lost in Space never said that.
This should have been obvious the moment you graduated from HS and all those friends that you had seemed to disappear.
The verse that says God sticks closer than a brother comforts me. I know he knows what it feels like to actually live in my skin...even my closest friends and relatives don’t know that - all they can do is sympathize and try to imagine what it’s like.
All I can say is, “enjoy every minute, every loving hug, and every wonderful experience you have now”! I had everything you mentioned. And then I lost my partner in life to a tragic , untimely accident. The fallout nearly destroyed our family. And shook our faith in a Savior who would let something like this happen to our loving, faithful family. Two years in and we are still clinging to each other trying to figure out how to get on with our lives and how to rebuild our faith so that we can go on with our new lives which have been irretrievably changed forever.
I figured it out by high school. (Back then, I was guilty myself for losing contact with a friend or two.)
By adulthood, life is all about family.
A good friend will help you move. A really good friend will help you move a body.
With more money for friends, your name might be Buypolar Bob?
If Lewis Smedes was a friend, he'd leave the Latin at home.
It was progressive; if they stayed past round one, he'd share round two and so on.
A guy like him is portrayed in movies and television as someone alone and bitter but it was the complete opposite.
Think of it this way, as you passed through high school, just as an example, are all of those people your friends, or just a select few?
You would have accumulated friends in high school regardless of when and where -- as most of us did -- so proximity is just a bycourse, and I don't buy 'obligation', at all.
I guess he was writing for a more educated crowd.
This person is confused. He thinks everyone must love the same way, and express it just the way he likes. Life isn’t like that. There is only one pure love (the Lord).
I think you were joking.
Latin not so bad! Lol
I get it.
I don’t really have good friends. Just people in know and see frequently.
Heck, I don’t even keep up with family. They never reach out to me.
Most of it is distance. I live very far away from them all.
Only when there is an event do we get together then it’s a full on family thing.
I've noticed that there are drivers who cannot be alone, even if they are the only one in their car. They can be on a divided highway with two lanes in the direction they are going, and only one other car in sight for half a mile, but they MUST drive right up and tailgate, or drive beside. They could pass the other car, they could drop back to the legal interval of one car length for every 10 miles of speed, but no. They must be WITH another car/driver. It's loony.
At first, it is the solitude. Maybe the slow realization comes later, and maybe it doesn’t. Is it really the loneliest, the most fundamental or the most important or the most common aspect of a lonely old age?
Yep, see that a lot. Bugs the hell out of me when they do it to me. Why do people risk their safety doing that? The farther you are from anyone else on the road, the better. Just stay away from me.
Except for Our Savior, no one is coming to the rescue.
I am happy. I have several women on the side who do not know each other....
She's starting to sound a lot like my wife.
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